What if the world is wider than we've been told?
In Moon's House, Matthew Spencer shares a series of extraordinary true experiences, encounters with non-human intelligences, uncanny synchronicities, and moments when the fabric of reality itself seemed to loosen. This is not a work of fiction or speculation. It is a personal account, grounded in direct experiences, accompanied by photographic evidence.
Written with the clarity of lived events and the intimacy of a confession, Moon's House invites skeptics, seekers, and the simply curious into a world where perception shifts, evidence speaks, and the sky may not be empty after all. Spencer doesn't offer conclusions, only an open door, and the quiet suggestion that what we call strange may simply be unfamiliar.
Blending memoir, anomaly, and atmospheric testimony, Moon's House is written for the curious, the skeptical, the attuned, and the uncertain. It joins the tradition of thoughtful, grounded works by experiencers who report, not to convince, but because they must.
For readers of John Keel, D.W. Pasulka, Whitley Strieber, and Annie Dillard, and those drawn to the edge of the known, Moon's House is a haunting contribution to the growing body of literature on the anomalous. A rare work that treats the extraordinary with honesty, restraint, and reverence.